[RFC PATCH v2 2/4] arm64: Add support for asymmetric AArch32 EL0 configurations

Qais Yousef qais.yousef at arm.com
Wed Oct 21 12:21:21 EDT 2020


On 10/21/20 16:39, Will Deacon wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 21, 2020 at 11:46:09AM +0100, Qais Yousef wrote:
> > When the CONFIG_ASYMMETRIC_AARCH32 option is enabled (EXPERT), the type
> > of the ARM64_HAS_32BIT_EL0 capability becomes WEAK_LOCAL_CPU_FEATURE.
> > The kernel will now return true for system_supports_32bit_el0() and
> > checks 32-bit tasks are affined to AArch32 capable CPUs only in
> > do_notify_resume(). If the affinity contains a non-capable AArch32 CPU,
> > the tasks will get SIGKILLed. If the last CPU supporting 32-bit is
> > offlined, the kernel will SIGKILL any scheduled 32-bit tasks (the
> > alternative is to prevent offlining through a new .cpu_disable feature
> > entry).
> > 
> > In addition to the relaxation of the ARM64_HAS_32BIT_EL0 capability,
> > this patch factors out the 32-bit cpuinfo and features setting into
> > separate functions: __cpuinfo_store_cpu_32bit(),
> > init_cpu_32bit_features(). The cpuinfo of the booting CPU
> > (boot_cpu_data) is now updated on the first 32-bit capable CPU even if
> > it is a secondary one. The ID_AA64PFR0_EL0_64BIT_ONLY feature is relaxed
> > to FTR_NONSTRICT and FTR_HIGHER_SAFE when the asymmetric AArch32 support
> > is enabled. The compat_elf_hwcaps are only verified for the
> > AArch32-capable CPUs to still allow hotplugging AArch64-only CPUs.
> > 
> > Make sure that KVM never sees the asymmetric 32bit system. Guest can
> > still ignore ID registers and force run 32bit at EL0.
> > 
> > Co-developed-by: Qais Yousef <qais.yousef at arm.com>
> > Signed-off-by: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas at arm.com>
> > Signed-off-by: Qais Yousef <qais.yousef at arm.com>
> 
> [...]
> 
> > diff --git a/arch/arm64/include/asm/thread_info.h b/arch/arm64/include/asm/thread_info.h
> > index 5e784e16ee89..312974ab2c85 100644
> > --- a/arch/arm64/include/asm/thread_info.h
> > +++ b/arch/arm64/include/asm/thread_info.h
> > @@ -67,6 +67,7 @@ void arch_release_task_struct(struct task_struct *tsk);
> >  #define TIF_FOREIGN_FPSTATE	3	/* CPU's FP state is not current's */
> >  #define TIF_UPROBE		4	/* uprobe breakpoint or singlestep */
> >  #define TIF_FSCHECK		5	/* Check FS is USER_DS on return */
> > +#define TIF_CHECK_32BIT_AFFINITY 6	/* Check thread affinity for asymmetric AArch32 */
> 
> I've looked through the patch and I still can't figure out why this extra
> flag is needed. We know if a CPU supports 32-bit EL0, and we know whether
> or not a task is 32-bit. So why the extra flag? Is it just a hangover from
> the old series?

It did evolve a bit organically.

AFAICS it helps as an optimization to avoid the checks unnecessarily. If it's
not expensive to do the checks in the loop in do_notify_resume() we can omit
it. We will still protect it with system_supports_asym_32bit_el0() so the check
is done on these systems only.

Thanks

--
Qais Yousef



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